Ravens take a knee in London, but stand for God save the Queen.

21766701_667702003569809_2364037874781739331_n.jpg

That guy's a winner.

The easy way out would be to play along and stay in the locker room.
 
What has happened is allegation, suspicion, innuendo, and supposition. That's as far as it goes at the moment. I'm not seeing any reason to stop living because DEMOCRATS can't accept the results of the last election.

I would really like to know how fluoride was able to connect the behavior going on in the NFL with Russia.
 
Well, he made it easy to pick out the real hero from the bunch.

Your opinion. Plenty of the Steelers are involved in community outreach, charitable organizations, school activities and other programs where they give back. Those are the real heroes, not the "show" heroes.
 
Your opinion. Plenty of the Steelers are involved in community outreach, charitable organizations, school activities and other programs where they give back. Those are the real heroes, not the "show" heroes.

YEAH; it's called community service and in the case of the Steelers, it was court ordered. :D

:truestory:
 
Concerts are not patriotic displays of the flag like ballparks have

Stretch said "The National Anthem is appropriate at any American event." She didn't limit it to sports.

And it still raises the question why do ballparks have these displays.
 
Your opinion. Plenty of the Steelers are involved in community outreach, charitable organizations, school activities and other programs where they give back. Those are the real heroes, not the "show" heroes.

I'm sure that they give generously of their time and money to worthy causes. But tell me this:

Tell me about Michael Vick's heroism.

Tell me about Ben Roethlisberger's heroism.

Tell me about Ernie Holmes' heroism.

A 2009 investigation by ESPN into the Steelers' history with performance-enhancing drugs found an alarming number of former players suffering from heart ailments. "Even if there is no pattern or clue linking the deaths to steroids," wrote the article's author, Mike Fish, "since 2000, 17 former Steelers have died before they reached the age of 59."

Seventeen men. Dead.

http://www.espn.com/espn/page2/story?page=fleming/110127&sportCat=nfl
 
Back
Top